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mongofiles
mongofiles
¶
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Users running on Mac OSX Sierra require the 3.2.10 or newer version of mongofiles.
-
mongofiles
¶
Synopsis¶
The mongofiles
utility makes it possible to manipulate files
stored in your MongoDB instance in GridFS objects from the
command line. It is particularly useful as it provides an interface
between objects stored in your file system and GridFS.
All mongofiles
commands have the following form:
mongofiles <options> <commands> <filename>
The components of the mongofiles
command are:
- Options. You may use one or more of
these options to control the behavior of
mongofiles
. - Commands. Use one of these commands to
determine the action of
mongofiles
. - A filename which is either: the name of a file on your local’s file system, or a GridFS object.
Run mongofiles
from the system command line, not the mongo
shell.
Important
For replica sets,
mongofiles
can only read from the set’s
primary.
Required Access¶
In order to connect to a mongod
that enforces authorization
with the --auth
option, you must use the
--username
and --password
options. The connecting user must possess, at a
minimum:
Options¶
Changed in version 3.0.0: mongofiles
removed the --dbpath
as well as related
--directoryperdb
and --journal
options. To use
mongofiles
, you must run mongofiles
against a running
mongod
or mongos
instance as appropriate.
-
mongofiles
¶
-
--help
¶
Returns information on the options and use of
mongofiles
.
-
--verbose
,
-v
¶
Increases the amount of internal reporting returned on standard output or in log files. Increase the verbosity with the
-v
form by including the option multiple times, (e.g.-vvvvv
.)
-
--quiet
¶
Runs
mongofiles
in a quiet mode that attempts to limit the amount of output.This option suppresses:
- output from database commands
- replication activity
- connection accepted events
- connection closed events
-
--version
¶
Returns the
mongofiles
release number.
-
--host
<hostname><:port>
¶ Specifies a resolvable hostname for the
mongod
that holds your GridFS system. By defaultmongofiles
attempts to connect to a MongoDB process running on the localhost port number27017
.Optionally, specify a port number to connect a MongoDB instance running on a port other than 27017.
-
--port
<port>
¶ Default: 27017
Specifies the TCP port on which the MongoDB instance listens for client connections.
-
--ipv6
¶
Removed in version 3.0.
Enables IPv6 support and allows
mongofiles
to connect to the MongoDB instance using an IPv6 network. Prior to MongoDB 3.0, you had to specify--ipv6
to use IPv6. In MongoDB 3.0 and later, IPv6 is always enabled.
-
--ssl
¶
New in version 2.6.
Enables connection to a
mongod
ormongos
that has TLS/SSL support enabled.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslCAFile
<filename>
¶ New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pem
file that contains the root certificate chain from the Certificate Authority. Specify the file name of the.pem
file using relative or absolute paths.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.Warning
Version 3.2 and earlier: For SSL connections (
--ssl
) tomongod
andmongos
, if themongofiles
runs without the--sslCAFile
,mongofiles
will not attempt to validate the server certificates. This creates a vulnerability to expiredmongod
andmongos
certificates as well as to foreign processes posing as validmongod
ormongos
instances. Ensure that you always specify the CA file to validate the server certificates in cases where intrusion is a possibility.
-
--sslPEMKeyFile
<filename>
¶ New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pem
file that contains both the TLS/SSL certificate and key. Specify the file name of the.pem
file using relative or absolute paths.This option is required when using the
--ssl
option to connect to amongod
ormongos
that hasCAFile
enabled withoutallowConnectionsWithoutCertificates
.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslPEMKeyPassword
<value>
¶ New in version 2.6.
Specifies the password to de-crypt the certificate-key file (i.e.
--sslPEMKeyFile
). Use the--sslPEMKeyPassword
option only if the certificate-key file is encrypted. In all cases, themongofiles
will redact the password from all logging and reporting output.If the private key in the PEM file is encrypted and you do not specify the
--sslPEMKeyPassword
option, themongofiles
will prompt for a passphrase. See SSL Certificate Passphrase.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslCRLFile
<filename>
¶ New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pem
file that contains the Certificate Revocation List. Specify the file name of the.pem
file using relative or absolute paths.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslAllowInvalidCertificates
¶
New in version 2.6.
Bypasses the validation checks for server certificates and allows the use of invalid certificates. When using the
allowInvalidCertificates
setting, MongoDB logs as a warning the use of the invalid certificate.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslAllowInvalidHostnames
¶
New in version 3.0.
Disables the validation of the hostnames in TLS/SSL certificates. Allows
mongofiles
to connect to MongoDB instances even if the hostname in their certificates do not match the specified hostname.Changed in version 3.0: Most MongoDB distributions include support for TLS/SSL. See Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients for more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB.
Changed in version 3.4: If
--sslCAFile
is not specified when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabled server, the system-wide CA certificate store will be used.
-
--sslFIPSMode
¶
New in version 2.6.
Directs the
mongofiles
to use the FIPS mode of the installed OpenSSL library. Your system must have a FIPS compliant OpenSSL library to use the--sslFIPSMode
option.Note
FIPS-compatible SSL is available only in MongoDB Enterprise. See Configure MongoDB for FIPS for more information.
-
--username
<username>
,
-u
<username>
¶ Specifies a username with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
--password
and--authenticationDatabase
options.
-
--password
<password>
,
-p
<password>
¶ Specifies a password with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
--username
and--authenticationDatabase
options.Changed in version 3.0.0: If you do not specify an argument for
--password
,mongofiles
returns an error.Changed in version 3.0.2: If you wish
mongofiles
to prompt the user for the password, pass the--username
option without--password
or specify an empty string as the--password
value, as in--password ""
.
-
--authenticationDatabase
<dbname>
¶ Specifies the database in which the user is created. See Authentication Database.
-
--authenticationMechanism
<name>
¶ Default: SCRAM-SHA-1
Changed in version 2.6: Added support for the
PLAIN
andMONGODB-X509
authentication mechanisms.Changed in version 3.0: Added support for the
SCRAM-SHA-1
authentication mechanism. Changed default mechanism toSCRAM-SHA-1
.Specifies the authentication mechanism the
mongofiles
instance uses to authenticate to themongod
ormongos
.Value Description SCRAM-SHA-1 RFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA1 hash function. MONGODB-CR MongoDB challenge/response authentication. MONGODB-X509 MongoDB TLS/SSL certificate authentication. GSSAPI (Kerberos) External authentication using Kerberos. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise. PLAIN (LDAP SASL) External authentication using LDAP. You can also use PLAIN
for authenticating in-database users.PLAIN
transmits passwords in plain text. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
-
--gssapiServiceName
¶
New in version 2.6.
Specify the name of the service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the service does not use the default name of
mongodb
.This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
-
--gssapiHostName
¶
New in version 2.6.
Specify the hostname of a service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the hostname of a machine does not match the hostname resolved by DNS.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
-
--db
<database>
,
-d
<database>
¶ Specifies the name of the database on which to run the
mongofiles
.
-
--collection
<collection>
,
-c
<collection>
¶ This option has no use in this context and a future release may remove it. See SERVER-4931 for more information.
-
--local
<filename>
,
-l
<filename>
¶ Specifies the local filesystem name of a file for get and put operations.
In the mongofiles put and mongofiles get commands, the required
<filename>
modifier refers to the name the object will have in GridFS.mongofiles
assumes that this reflects the file’s name on the local file system. This setting overrides this default.
-
--type
<MIME>
¶ Provides the ability to specify a MIME type to describe the file inserted into GridFS storage.
mongofiles
omits this option in the default operation.Use only with mongofiles put operations.
-
--replace
,
-r
¶
Alters the behavior of mongofiles put to replace existing GridFS objects with the specified local file, rather than adding an additional object with the same name.
In the default operation, files will not be overwritten by a mongofiles put option.
-
--prefix
string
¶ Default: fs
GridFS prefix to use.
-
--writeConcern
<document>
¶ Default: majority
Specifies the write concern for each write operation that
mongofiles
writes to the target database.Specify the write concern as a document with w options.
Commands¶
-
list <prefix>
Lists the files in the GridFS store. The characters specified after
list
(e.g.<prefix>
) optionally limit the list of returned items to files that begin with that string of characters.
-
search <string>
Lists the files in the GridFS store with names that match any portion of
<string>
.
-
put <filename>
Copy the specified file from the local file system into GridFS storage.
Here,
<filename>
refers to the name the object will have in GridFS, andmongofiles
assumes that this reflects the name the file has on the local file system. If the local filename is different use themongofiles --local
option.
-
get <filename>
Copy the specified file from GridFS storage to the local file system.
Here,
<filename>
refers to the name the object will have in GridFS.mongofiles
writes the file to the local file system using the file’sfilename
in GridFS. To choose a different location for the file on the local file system, use the--local
option.
-
get_id "<ObjectId>"
New in version 3.2.0.
Copy the specified file from GridFS storage to the local file system.
Here
<ObjectId>
refers to the extended JSON_id
of the object in GridFS.mongofiles
writes the file to the local file system using the file’sfilename
in GridFS. To choose a different location for the file on the local file system, use the--local
option.
-
delete <filename>
Delete the specified file from GridFS storage.
-
delete_id "<ObjectId>"
New in version 3.2.0.
Delete the specified file from GridFS storage. Specify the file using its
_id
.
Examples¶
To return a list of all files in a GridFS collection in the
records
database, use the following invocation at the system shell:
mongofiles -d records list
This mongofiles
instance will connect to the
mongod
instance running on the 27017
localhost
interface to specify the same operation on a different port or
hostname, and issue a command that resembles one of the following:
mongofiles --port 37017 -d records list
mongofiles --host db1.example.net -d records list
mongofiles --host db1.example.net --port 37017 -d records list
Modify any of the following commands as needed if you’re connecting
the mongod
instances on different ports or hosts.
To upload a file named 32-corinth.lp
to the GridFS collection in
the records
database, you can use the following command:
mongofiles -d records put 32-corinth.lp
To delete the 32-corinth.lp
file from this GridFS collection in
the records
database, you can use the following command:
mongofiles -d records delete 32-corinth.lp
To search for files in the GridFS collection in the records
database that have the string corinth
in their names, you can use
following command:
mongofiles -d records search corinth
To list all files in the GridFS collection in the records
database
that begin with the string 32
, you can use the following command:
mongofiles -d records list 32
To fetch the file from the GridFS collection in the records
database named 32-corinth.lp
, you can use the following command:
mongofiles -d records get 32-corinth.lp
To fetch the file from the GridFS collection in the records
database
with _id: ObjectId("56feac751f417d0357e7140f")
, you can use
the following command:
mongofiles -d records get_id 'ObjectId("56feac751f417d0357e7140f")'
You must include quotation marks around the _id
.